Stonehedge Winery

In 1992, the Shahabi Brothers began producing wines in the small town of St. Helena, situated in the heart of Napa Valley. The Shahabis selected Napa Valley with the strong belief that the rich and diverse terrain of Napa Valley combined with the ever beaming and warm California sunshine would produce exceptional wines, hardly matched anywhere else in the world. From the very beginning, the Shahabis made the gentle care of the grapes from vine to bottle priority one. This care and dedication has pushed the small family operated Stonehedge to the forefront of California winemaking and a recognized name for exceptional quality.
Since its first release in the early 90’s, Stonehedge has quickly become synonymous with quality. Results speak for themselves. Since its debut, Stonehedge sales now span the globe, from the entire United States to Europe, Asia, Middle East, and Africa.
Stonehedges mission is to produce wines that are worlds apart from wines produced by the large producers or corporate Read more »

In 1992, the Shahabi Brothers began producing wines in the small town of St. Helena, situated in the heart of Napa Valley. The Shahabis selected Napa Valley with the strong belief that the rich and diverse terrain of Napa Valley combined with the ever beaming and warm California sunshine would produce exceptional wines, hardly matched anywhere else in the world. From the very beginning, the Shahabis made the gentle care of the grapes from vine to bottle priority one. This care and dedication has pushed the small family operated Stonehedge to the forefront of California winemaking and a recognized name for exceptional quality.
Since its first release in the early 90’s, Stonehedge has quickly become synonymous with quality. Results speak for themselves. Since its debut, Stonehedge sales now span the globe, from the entire United States to Europe, Asia, Middle East, and Africa.
Stonehedges mission is to produce wines that are worlds apart from wines produced by the large producers or corporate conglomerates. Stonehedge's philosophy is to produce elegantly handcrafted wines that are affordable by the majority of the population. In todays world, after all the consolidations and mergers, corporate giants who treat wine like liquor own some of the even so called small producers. At Stonehedge, we ritually believe that wine is a delicate and sensitive product that must be handled with utmost respect and attention to all details. Stonehedge is dedicated to producing exciting, delicious, multi-dimensional wines that are not only available to a few, but to everyone.
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Stonehedge Winery

The wine is a deep ruby color in the glass, classic for a blend that is heavy on Merlot. The nose is a breath of smoky, mineral goodness, with hints of leather, blackberry and toasted oak. The taste is really nice, with a rush of ripe fruit up front, cherry, red currant and raspberry that transition nicely to some cherry cola and black pepper ...
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Wine review
by
jtryka

April 2015

Petite Sirah has the stuffing to hold up to extended oak aging. It can also be made in a lighter, fruit-forward, early drinking style. As a result, a survey of current release Petite Sirah from several producers might easily span four or more vintages. The wines selected for you below, all current releases from Northern California, run from 2009...
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2009 Reserve Cabernet was carbonated and bland and undrinkable. Tried to email Stonehedge about it and no response. Would not buy Stonehedge wines again given my recent unpleasant experience.
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Deep lustrous red to the edge of blackness, the alcohol-forward (14.9% alc/vol!!!!!) nose is jammy and smokey with scents of charred wood and cloves. Very full-bodied and slightly off-dry, the funky charred flavor fills the mouth with dried fruits and concentrated vanilla extract. The result is an overpowering complex finish that creates the u...
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Wine review
by
thevinoboy

Oct 8, 2010

Only about historic Stonehenge .... everything else is purely theoretical. Yes, James Cameron can not tell a good story ... He almost made the tomb of Jesus likely if it is a big mistake that James was in Latin and Aramaic ... a direct translation of the Aramaic was Jacob ... Oh well ... throw one on the shelf of fiction too ... lol
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